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  • ...]] and [[post-structuralism]] in the work of [[Jacques Derrida]], [[Michel Foucault]], [[Louis Hjelmslev]], [[Roman Jakobson]], [[Jacques Lacan]], [[Claude Lé ...an [[overview]] of Greimas’s semiotic theory.) In two of his [[recent]] books, De l’imperfection (1987)and Sémiotique des passions (1991, The Semiotic
    60 KB (8,683 words) - 22:58, 20 May 2019
  • ...But this kind of political subjectivity seems to have disappeared. In your books you speak of a post-political world.</i></b><br class="NetscapeDummy" xmlns ...ctively masks its opposite: intolerance. It is a recurring theme in all my books that, from this liberal perspective, the basic perception of another human
    36 KB (5,977 words) - 21:58, 21 May 2006
  • ...der that in [[philosophy]], thinkers like Louis [[Althusser]] and Michel [[Foucault]], as well as Gilles [[Deleuze]], were so obsessed with [[Spinoza]]! I don' ...[model]] (The Care of the [[Self]], The Uses of [[Pleasure]]]. I [[think]] Foucault's ethics fit perfectly the late capitalist universal Spinozist signifier. E
    21 KB (3,498 words) - 01:13, 25 May 2019
  • ...[thought]], including the [[post-structuralist]] [[philosophers]] [[Michel Foucault]] and [[Jacques Derrida]]. His most influential work was ''Introduction à ...k on [[Immanuel Kant]] received little attention. Recently, [[three]] more books have been published: a 1932 [[thesis]] on the [[physical]] and [[philosophi
    9 KB (1,302 words) - 17:57, 27 May 2019
  • ...this kind of [[political subjectivity]] seems to have disappeared. In your books you speak of a post-political world. ...ely masks its opposite: [[intolerance]]. It is a recurring theme in all my books that, from this liberal perspective, the basic perception of another human
    26 KB (4,482 words) - 01:56, 21 May 2019
  • ...t the universal rule in each unique [[concrete]] situation); however, in [[Foucault]], this simply means that the subject is thrown into a situation in which h ...on the disavowal of the Unconscious: what usually passes unnoticed is that Foucault's [[rejection]] of the [[psychoanalytic]] account of [[sexuality]] also inv
    42 KB (6,817 words) - 00:33, 21 May 2019
  • ...der that in [[philosophy]], thinkers like Louis [[Althusser]] and Michel [[Foucault]], as well as Gilles [[Deleuze]], were so obsessed with [[Spinoza]]! I don' ...[model]] (The Care of the [[Self]], The Uses of [[Pleasure]]]. I [[think]] Foucault's ethics fit perfectly the late capitalist universal Spinozist signifier. E
    22 KB (3,750 words) - 01:12, 25 May 2019
  • ...uality. It would be taken up by [[Nietzsche]], [[John Dewey]] and [[Michel Foucault]] directly, as well as in the work of numerous artists and authors. There h [[Karl Popper]] used the term ''historicism'' in his influential books ''The Poverty of Historicism'' and [[The Open Society and Its Enemies]], to
    13 KB (1,919 words) - 20:56, 23 May 2019
  • ...what the tragic was; what remained to him was only the night of a book, of books, in which to howl to all men that solitude, which is suffering itself, the ...eeves, an official place under the sun of our bourgeois [[society]], their books sell, and—does one ever know?—one has to ''think of the future''.
    72 KB (12,262 words) - 21:01, 27 May 2019
  • The authors of books like this are often reluctant to speak of the private lives of their subjec ...zek's fellow theorist Judith Butler writes on the back cover of one of his books: 'Slavoj lives to theorize', but we suspect the opposite is true and Zizek
    87 KB (14,944 words) - 13:51, 12 September 2015
  • ...[Strauss]], the [[philosopher]] and archeologist of [[knowledge]] Michel [[Foucault]], the reinterpreter of [[Marxism]] Louis [[Althusser]], the writers for th ...r]] of things: An archaeology of the [[human]] sciences. New York: Vintage Books. (Original [[work]] published 1966)
    8 KB (1,182 words) - 23:56, 20 May 2019
  • ...mong the most excruciating readings in contemporary [[literature]]), while Michel invents a solution: a new [[self]]-replicating gene for the post-[[human]] ...en the two: the disappearance of sexual [[difference]]. In his last works, Foucault envisioned the [[space]] of pleasures liberated from Sex, and one is tempte
    26 KB (4,137 words) - 23:27, 23 May 2019
  • ...ms, has a significant connection to later radical critics such as michel [[foucault]], roland [[barthes]], and jacques [[derrida]], as James Clifford has shown ...ted in the College, was directly affiliated with the artistic avant-garde: Michel Leiris, for example, was a member of the Mission Dakr-Djibouti (1932), an e
    25 KB (3,515 words) - 18:28, 27 May 2019
  • ...r we live in, bent on disciplining the subject. [[Discipline]] is meant by Foucault in both its senses, arguing that the science of man has created its own obj ...-1902 (Marie Bonaparte, Anna Freud, and Ernst Kris, Eds.). New York: Basic Books. ——. (1987]]
    51 KB (8,274 words) - 15:59, 25 July 2006
  • ...//gen.lib.rus.ec/search.php?req=Jean-Michel+Rabat%C3%A9&column=author Jean-Michel Rabaté]</div> ...An [[Introduction to Jacques Lacan]] through Popular [[Culture]] (October Books)
    449 KB (71,997 words) - 20:32, 9 June 2019
  • ...enne. (1979). Reading "Capital" (Ben Brewster, Trans.). New York: Schocken Books. (Original work published 1965) ...concept of ''[[habitus]]'', as the ISA may in a sense be approached with [[Foucault]]'s [[disciplinary institutions]]. Althusser offers the example of the Voic
    34 KB (5,155 words) - 02:25, 28 August 2006
  • ...[[Luce Irigaray]], [[Jacques Derrida]], and, most significantly, [[Michel Foucault]]. (At the same time, like most of Butler's work, it is regarded by some re ...heory of gender," in which "gender" is a kind of repeated, largely forced (Foucault's "discipline") enactment or "performance" that produces the imaginary fict
    11 KB (1,703 words) - 03:34, 28 August 2006
  • ...aps, this century will be called Deleuzian." (Deleuze, for his part, said Foucault's comment was "a joke meant to make people who like us laugh, and make ever ...ime he published ''Nietzsche and Philosophy'' (1962) and befriended Michel Foucault. From 1964 to 1969 he was a professor at the [[University of Lyon]]. In 1
    19 KB (2,809 words) - 06:27, 28 August 2006
  • ...elite [[École Normale Superieure]] (ENS), where he studied under [[Michel Foucault]] and [[Louis Althusser]], among others. After studies at the Husserl Arch ...er|Heidegger]], [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel|Hegel]], [[Michel Foucault|Foucault]], [[Georges Bataille]] and [[René Descartes|Descartes]], anthropologist [
    37 KB (5,581 words) - 06:34, 28 August 2006
  • ...urice Merleau-Ponty]], [[Jean-Paul Sartre]], [[Jacques Derrida]], [[Michel Foucault]], [[Jean-Luc Nancy]], and [[Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe]] also studied his wo .... Foucault's relation to Heidegger is a matter of considerable difficulty; Foucault acknowledged Heidegger as a philosopher whom he read but never wrote about.
    43 KB (6,493 words) - 06:40, 28 August 2006

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